19. Did Jesus “Fellowship” Judas?
    
    This is the sort of question for which there is
    no provable answer, if by “fellowship” is meant merely the technical
    participation in the “Last Supper”. A reasonable reading of the four
    gospel narratives leads to the conclusion that Jesus did indeed break bread with
    Judas, knowing full well his traitorous intentions. Brothers Thomas and Roberts
    both subscribed to this view, as their writings show. But nowhere do the records
    specifically spell this out. 
    
    The partaking of the emblems, however, is not the
    actual issue. We know that Jesus would have broken bread with Judas, even
    if it is felt that Judas in fact excused himself and went out before that point
    in the evening’s activities. We know this because Jesus did wash the feet
    of Judas, as well as the other eleven. We know that because Jesus offered the
    sop to Judas. (This was traditionally a mark of great love and esteem, for the
    host to give the choicest morsel in the common bowl to a special guest.) Indeed,
    we know this by a simple observation: for more than three years Judas ate and
    slept and traveled with Jesus and the other apostles, and never once did Jesus
    do or say anything that might have led the others to suspect that Judas was the
    one who would betray him. These were all instances of “fellowship”
    just as much as the symbolic common partaking of bread and wine; all together,
    they show that Jesus had admitted a man whom he knew to be a hypocrite into the
    innermost circle of his companionship for an extended time.
    
    In 1847, after learning the Truth and
    being baptized, Brother John Thomas was the subject of certain charges made by
    the hierarchy of the Campbellite (“Church of Christ”) congregations.
    They demanded that Brother Thomas leave the “fellowship” of their
    congregations, because his “Confession and Abjuration” (written
    March 3, 1847) implied that many members of those congregations did not believe
    the full gospel. At such a demand Brother Thomas became highly indignant and
    fired off the following reply:
    
    “Without comparing you [some of the
    Campbellite “brethren”] to Judas, I would inquire, Was not he in his
    sins when Jesus broke the loaf with him as well as the rest of the twelve? This
    will be a sufficient quid for your quo, that I necessarily abjure churches,
    because there are those among them who on my principles are in their
    sins....There are many in the American reform-churches who believe in....the
    ‘immortality of the soul’. We have learned, however, the important
    lesson of bearing and forbearing with one another, in hope that all will come to
    see the real truth....But your dogma is that I ought to reject them....We,
    however, do not think so” (From a personal letter, quoted by Robert
    Roberts in  Dr. Thomas: His Life and Work, 1954 Edition, p.
    168).
    
    We must not, of course, suppose that Brother
    Thomas retained such a “liberal” view of “fellowship”
    for the rest of his days. There did come a time when it was desirable from his
    viewpoint, as well as those who made him their enemy, that he no longer be
    affiliated in any sense with the “reform” churches. But we might
    note with care that this was at least two years after his true immersion into
    the hope of Israel. And at any rate his point about Judas may be well taken, as
    far as it goes, even by us today. We see Brother Thomas as a man much like the
    apostle Paul, willing to recognize holders of false doctrine as
    “brethren”, so long as there was reasonable expectation of their
    further enlightenment and reform. 
    
    Robert Roberts, in his “True Principles and
    Uncertain Details”, says:
    
    “Judas was a thief and Jesus knew it, but
    tolerated him till he manifested himself. Was Jesus responsible [i.e. for
    Judas’ sins] while he fellowshipped him? Certainly not” (The
        Christadelphian, Vol. 92, No. 1097 — Nov. 1955 — p.
    417).